"But you must remember, my fellow-citizens, that eternal vigilance by the people is the price of liberty, and that you must pay the price if you wish to secure the blessing. It behooves you, therefore, to be watchful in your States as well as in the Federal Government." Andrew Jackson

Followers

Saturday, October 25, 2014

What do you get with cross-corruption of the elephants
and donkeys? A massive Hippopotamus to squash your vote and mine.

How can this happen? Congress intentionally set up a
system to better finance and control elections. Let me explain the
congressional mechanics of the system that will flourish in the 2014 and 2016
elections unless voters take it down, in the same manner that voters dismantled
the Comprehensive Immigration Reform Act, which was to be a more manageable new
voter pool for the donkeys and elephants.

The financial instrument was sired
by Senator John McCain who sponsored the Indian Gaming Regulatory Act of 1988
to create a separate, tax-exempt monopoly that would soon pump billions back
into both political parties. The current annual honeypot to play with here is
over $20 billion. To ensure that the flow of money gets back to Congress the
Federal Election Commission determined in May 2005 that tribal governments are not governments, and therefore could
freely participate in and contribute funds to political parties, incumbents or
candidates. No other governments
may write a check to a political party or candidate, but hey—Congress who
giveth the monopoly to tribal governments must benefit from the profits.

To ensure that such funds are
undisclosed, Senator McCain, also the sire of the infamous 2002 McCain-Feingold
Campaign Finance Reform Act diligently, even belligerently refused to require
that tribal governments disclose, as must all other contributors, financial
contributions to political parties or election candidates. Pretty neat. Create
the separate tax-exempt monopoly, spread it across hundreds of private tribal
governments who are not answerable to American voters, and then permit them, as
the only governments allowed to
participate in America’s elections without transparency…and Voila! In
California alone, tribal political influence has overtaken even the labor
unions. I am not speaking of the full and necessary right of every individual
American Indians citizen to vote. I am
speaking only of the unregulated participation of separate tribal governments
in America’s elections.

More recently, the U.S. Supreme
Court partially improved the First Amendment playing field for campaign
activities when it ruled in a 2010 case, Citizens
United v. Federal Election Commission, that the First Amendment prohibits
the government from restricting independent political expenditures by
non-profit organizations. The principles
articulated by the Supreme Court in the case have also been extended to corporations, labor unions and
other associations. The Citizens United case opened a larger voice for countering the giant
tribal monies flowing into federal and state elections. The case
did not involve the federal ban on direct contributions from corporations or unions
to candidate campaigns or political parties, which remain illegal in races for
federal office. No one’s wild about the Citizens
United case, but the result at least lessened the national power of tribal
government participation in America’s elections.

So that’s the financial pathway,
but at least we each still have our own vote, right? Wrong.

Remember that tribal governments
existed long before the Voting Rights Act of 1965, but tribal government
conduct in elections is not addressed
in the Voting Rights Act designed to assist minority voters, nor has tribal
government conduct in elections been addressed in any subsequent federal legislation respecting minority voters.
Why is this a problem? The need of better access for minority voters is worthy
and not the issue here. But when a separate government controls one minority,
and its individual minority (Native American) voters can be coerced into bloc
voting, that minority becomes a renegade “swing” vote. And the “swing” goes to
the party most cooperative in close elections across the country.

There is an additional worry. In
many, if not most states that host Indian reservations, a tribal identification
card is the sole identification needed for a tribal member to register to vote.
This would be fine if tribal governments were also required to provide accurate
lists of their enrolled members to Secretaries of States or county officials
that regulate and enforce elections. Tribes are not required to do so, and
states have absolutely no legal way to verify or authenticate a tribal
identification card used for voter registration. Why is this is a problem?
States can verify state driver’s licenses, and other state identification
sources. But what if tribal
governments were to issue to a single voting tribal member, an identification
card in an Indian name, an English name, and perhaps a maiden name as well? If
I am a registered voter, and I have one vote, but my tribal neighbor may have
more than one vote, and then votes in accordance with tribal government instruction,
what does that do to my vote? It is part of the Hippopotamus that squelches my
vote and yours.

This system has been in serious
play in evenly divided states for more than two decades already, and is
becoming even the more severe in terms of financial and voting political
outcomes. Need some examples? How about the very close election that
transferred a Senate seat from Slade Gorton to Maria Cantwell? Or the 130-vote
difference on a third recount that provided Washington State with Governor Gregoire
instead of Dino Rossi? The State Capitol of Olympia has been Santa Claus for 31
tribal governments for years now. Property and business tax losses and state
revenue flowing to these tribes must be offset by the rest of Washington
taxpayers.

Another egregious example exists in
Montana. Before the November 2006 elections, the Crow Indian tribe passed a
tribal legislative directive, endorsing a slate of tribal candidates for county government offices, and
announced, “We’re taking over Big Horn
County government.” The tribal legislation was full-page advertisement in
newspapers on and off the reservation, and mandatory tribal employee “feasts”
were held with shiny new tribal ID cards issued to tribal members up to and
through Election Day.

At two polling precincts within
the Crow Indian reservation, ballot boxes were left unlocked all day, a
non-tribal poll watcher ordered to leave, and at final count, all tribal
candidates handily won. It was a stunning and literal governmental coup. As a
result of the Big Horn County election in November 2006 enrolled tribal members
hold the county government seats of commissioners, the county attorney, the
county sheriff, the county judge, and the county clerk/recorder (oddly, the one
in charge of elections in Big Horn County). These tribal members now regulate
and conduct county government actions of land use, taxation, and law
enforcement that do not apply to tribal members within their reservation
boundary. Unfortunately, the Secretary of State of Montana has no enforcement
authority over polling precincts within Indian reservations. There are over 75
such polling precincts in Montana alone. But this shenanigan in Big Horn County
had national consequence as well.

The ballots in unlocked ballot
boxes on the Crow Indian Reservation provided over 800 votes to Senator John
Tester, along with an additional 1,100 votes from other polling precincts
within Montana Indian reservations. Senator Tester’s election shifted the power
of the entire Senate, contributed to Congress’s attitudinal shift about the War
in Iraq, and caused Senator Ben Nighthorse-Campbell to boast with such comments
as:

“And I
think too you know, and
I tell them literally every place I give talks on Indians now, I think
in one respect Indians can claim victory on the control of the United States
Senate. Because it worked like this [in the 2006 mid-term elections last
November]: they were down to the wire. The last senator whose votes were
counted was Jon Tester of Montana. They had the numbers up there and they know
it was Indians put him over the top. And Jon told me that too, he knows it too,
Indian people got him elected.

Well,
when you have the leadership and all the committee chairmanships and all the
stuff change because one senator got elected [putting Democrats in the
majority] - if Jon had not won that race, wouldn't have had a new president of
the Senate, wouldn't have had a new chairman of the different committees and
all that, right? So in a sense Indians can say that we got that man elected and
he's the one that tipped the scales, so we won the Senate.”[Ben Nighthorse-Campbell, Indian Country Today, June 15, 2007]

Minnesota, Montana, New Mexico,
South Dakota, Washington, and many other states across our election landscape
are very evenly divided between elephants and donkeys. Representing less than
1% of America’s population, the Hippopotami (tribal governments) politically
rule today, with financial and voting power that is silent, secret,
orchestrated by private tribal governments and further corrupts the elephants
and donkeys, neither of whom call the shots any more. Does this help explain
why both parties are now pandering to illegal immigration fans for a fresh and
more manageable voting population?

One would think that all the
perks obtained for over twenty years for tribes by Senator McCain would buy a
little loyalty. But having attempted even a mild limit to off-reservation
casinos, McCain has fallen from the tribal industry grace. Even BIA Assistant
Secretary Kevin Washburn finds no problem with verbally disrespecting Senator
McCain in public hearings. Wealthy tribal governments require that elephants
and donkeys remain loyal beasts of burden or they are immediately relegated to
the tribal glue factory. Just ask former
Senators Conrad Burns, Slade Gorton, Tom Daschle, or current Senator McCain.
Senators such as Jon Tester know exactly where their bread is buttered and
behave accordingly.

The congressionally created
Hippopotamus has tamed its masters, and the cost to you and me is the last
precious thing we have: our vote. One
man; one vote. This foundational principle must be unimpeded by out-of-control
tribal governments acting as a silent but controlling Third Political Party in
America’s elections.

What can you and I do about
this? Track the funding behind incumbents, candidates and current elected
officials. Be certain that elected representatives adhere to their Oath of
Office and abandon their Stockholm Syndrome behavior toward tribal governments.
Demand that not a single ballot box or polling precinct be located on land that
lacks full and forceful authority and enforcement of the Secretary of State.
And these actions must be done quickly and constantly to bring One Person – One
Vote back to reality in this country.